Friday, March 13, 2015

PROCRASTINATION

             Procrastination in interpretation is just opposite to punctuality. While punctuality is great virtue procrastination is a debasing vice. It kills ones precious time, spoils one’s ready broth, and ruins one’s other qualities.
             But procrastination like a dangerous virus lives unseen in our habit and, so to say — work-culture. It is never inherent in man. Man carelessly acquires this sickness of habit. One who is not properly trained to perform one’s work within the scheduled hour, one who loves to be engaged in absurd brown-studies, one who is wonton enough to indulge in nurturing the illusion of unlimited time in the future to execute one’s tasks leisurely and unobtrusively, is foolish enough to bring about one’s own execution through failures and failures all through life. Procrastination is truely an offshoot of laziness — the worst foe of man. It hinders the easy flow of rhythmic performance of tasks and duties and social commitments.
             To ward off this dangerous enemy we must cultivate the habit of punctuality. A well-regulated work-culture perked up with resolution only can vanquish this perversion of character. It’s a drug, its addiction dies hard. Regularization of delaying liability and of strict routines can only eradicate this curse.